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Chicago examiner vol vii no 146 a m wednesday june 9 1909 16 pages price one cent euver.rt y caialcw 30 cents per month Taft to insist on inheritance tax if made tariff arbitrator aldrich and president hold long conference on plans to pass bill fight on wool schedule dolliver in fiery speech charges plot between the woolen manufacturers washington june b president Taft and senator aldrich were in conference an hour and a half at the executive of fices this afternoon the tariff is supposed to have been the topic under discussion no statement was given out with regard to the conference specifically it was bald at the wbjte house that there was nothing to be said about the announce ment that the president was called upon to act as arbitrator between the senate and house conferees on the tariff bill this announcement has greatly simpli fied the situation it is generally sup posed that senator aldrich has put the president in a position largely to get out of the conference the kind of a bill he be lieves will meet the platform pledges of his party if it be pointed out that under this plan the party leaders are thrusting upon the president responsibility for their work the answer is that he must accept responsibility anyhow for the bill to which he appends his signature any pos sibility of a veto would also be obviated by the consent of the president thus to act as referee an important feature of the latest de velopments in the situation is that the in heritance tax provision will not down and if the president engages ln the role of arbitrator that tax or the tax on cor poration dividends which is next on the president's list of special revenue pro ducers will go into the tariff bill aldrich favorable to plan from an authoritative source it is learned that senator aldrich is not indisposed to the plan for the president to act as arbi trator there was no session of the senate to night the entire day was spent iu con sideration of the woolen schedule without any vote being taken and it ls likely that the debate will continue for several day more before a vote is had at the close of to-day's session senator clay of georgia got the floor too late to begin a speech but ln a heated altercation with kean of new jersey who was in the chair he served notice that he would pay his compliments to the republicans of the senate to-mor row ever since the administration of andrew johnson wool has been one of the products of the american farmer that has been pro tected by a tariff duty in the aldrich bill wool schedule which came up for con sideration to-day the rates in some in stances exceed the tax fixed by the dingley bill senator dolliver attacked the sched ule in a fiery speech charging that a com bination existed between the worsted manu facturers and those who weave the finer woolens it was a day of talk nearly every sen ator had something to say senators war ren and dolliver afforded real amusement dolliver took exception to the finance com mittee's amendment raising the duty on various kinds of woolen wastes from 20 and 25 cents to so cents per pound he declared that this would work a hardship on the carded woolen manufacturers grosvenor in a 10 suit mr warren protested that in objecting to the rates proposed mr dolliver was abandoning the doctrine of protection dolliver defended his republicanism senator carter called attention to the small percentage of carded wool now being manufactured he said not a carded wool en suit was to be found in the senate chamber and when the carded woolen rep resentatives came before the wavs and means committee it was noticed thev all wore worsteds general grosvenor bad on a suit of carded woolen a suit-that cost 10 said mr dolliver but he is a statesman out of a job " said carter he represents the wool growers of the lulled states returned the lowan mr dolliver succeeded in getting mr carter to admit that his proposition to amend the aldrich woolen schedule and base the rates on shrinkage would be an improvement over the present law mr smoot said that mr dolliver's su gestlon would te all right except that it would be impossible to administer it mr warren said it would require a read justment of the entire wool schedule rich man's wipe who declares divorce void dixey is married again marie nordstrom bride actor secretly weds the leading lady of mary jane's pa com pany new york june b henry e dixey famous as the stage hero of adonis the man on the box and mary jane's pa let it be known to-day that he has married again and has been married for three weeks past at least his bride is miss marie nordstrom leading lady of the mary jane's pa company and mr dixey brought her back to new york with htm from the west to-night just where the marriage occurred is not divulged he confessed that miss nord strom had been mrs dixey for some days before the company closed out mary jane's pa at milwaukee last saturday dight it was a secret marriage and we've come back to spend the first part of onr honeymoon that's all i care to say about it mr dixey said Taft gives girl watch president presents memento of trip to miss mabel boardman washington june 8.-m!ss mabel boardman was presented to-night by pres ident Taft with a handsome diamond stud ded watch it was a token of esteem from the celebrated philippine party which the president then secretary of war took with him iu 1905 to the philippines and the orient miss boardman did much to make this party a pleasant one and in no small meas ure made three couples happy the long worths representative and mrs swager sherley and former representative iÂ»,l j mrs w bourke cockran the presenta tion took place at th boardman home it was unexpected by miss boardman who greeted the visitors in shirtwaist and street skirt tip not for landlord wall street broker finds property owner behind l.nnch counter xew york june b two avall street men were wining at the north lunch count er in the astor house rotunda recently at the conclusion of the meal one laid a quarter down at us plate for the waiter the other pocketed all of his change don't you ever tip the waiter quired the first broker tip the waiter exclaimed the second not much that's my landlord the waiter-landlord was charl-s miller who has collected tips at the astor house lunch counter for thirty-three years dur ing that lime he has amassed the tidv snm of t)0.000 most of his fortune is invested in brooklyn real estate chicagoan hurt in paris taxicab collides with cor wounds attorney manrlce heekels paris jnne b maurice heckels a chi cago lawyer was seriously wounded iu the bead and face to-day by broken glass lie was riding in it taxicab which came in collision with a tramcar at the corner of kite rivoli and line itoulc kill wild steer in mad chase a policeman a wild steer a patrol wa gon a crowd of men women and children and tt revolver played parts in an excit ing chase culminating in the death of the animal iu the stock s'ards district yester day the steer escaped from the morris & co pens and threatened to injure pedes trians guggenheim decree is declared fraud tx-mayor dunne who grant id decree now wants his decision reviewed wo han secured 150,000 wife r alleges her husband left ko r at the behest of family charges that , , Â„ , .... - a decree of divorce oa tÂ«"""l.hy jrac b (; â€ž-,.,â€ž ll ,. ll â€ž ,â€ž p from wllÃŸam -,â€žâ€ž,,â€ž,â€ž.;â€ž,. bead â€ž r , llp smeiret trust wl _ ,â€ž,,,:,â€žâ€ž. â€ž ;, f , 1;:i , were made before Â„..,,.,. â€žâ€ž.,â€ž,._ vl , st . n , lv and followed by â– ,â€ž,;.,â€ž ( â€ž sh(l(v _.__ why the decree sk mi , ,â€žâ€ž Â„â€ž s â€ž t aside . former mayor l-ldw k dullb / a ppe_red m court with five :>?;,,,â€ž-,;â€ž ,â€ž _.â€ž,*,, t â€ž h alleged fraud is deta ti . ( â€ž-__ w . ls obtained before j i<l -">, , vl . ile wwle _<â– , vas sitting on the fflrec/l jln-h the plain iff avviii/tweiihelm and her supposed attorney f werner of s(mv york conspired ta pra-.th-e a fraud on the court at the ti-jic of the deeie the complain ant seoti-pft alimony of slm.ihjo of which werner received 12,500 complainant thrice mar ied the romrplainant has beet thrice mar tied and has figured an ecus number of times in divorce suits cugsmiheim mar ried aimee lillian btelnberget the com plainant's first husband was iwilllam c herbert a naval office who obtained a decree for desertion iuggenhem was the second mnrrying the complainant nov :><). 1900 her next husband was jttes roger wabl who obtained an annulment of the contract ln france on the ground that the Chicago decree wa invalid the complainant iu her affidavit says the defendant told tue at the time of our marriage that he wanted to keep it secret for a time until he could reconcile his family to the step hi had taken ex plaining to me that they might be opposed to his marriage to me becar.se he ami ail his family were orthodox lews while i was a christian woman lie assured inc however that it would be only for a short time and that ultimately be would win them over and i would be properly re ceived by them as bis wife at his sug gestion n suite of rooms was engaged al the hotel manhattan nov york c_-ber 1 continued to live until january 11 1001 prefers family to wife on xew year's the defendant left me saying he bad decided never io return ile told me he had told his brother benjamin guggenheim or our rap.rringc and that lie and the rest of his family were unal terably opposed to it and that they had presented tiie alternative to bin to choose between me and them and that he had determined to leave me in desperation 1 saw his brother dan iel lint all efforts on my part to bring back my husband failed completely al though i had done absolutely nothing and had been guilty of no wrong of any kind and had been a faithful and loving wife lo him ills brother daniel assured me that all attempts on my part to bring the de fendant back wonld be useless finally after i had made eiery reason able effort to effect a reconciliation with the defendant and these efforts had fai>d it was suggested that our difficulties be placed in the hands of our respective at torneys to arrange matters to my satis faction and for my proper protection she then declares it was suggested thai she go lo south dakota and remain there for six months in order to obtain a legal i domicile she flatly refused to go and soon afterward was td'.d that it would bej necessary for her to go to Chicago where a valid decree of divorce cotrtd he se 1 cured believing site was to obtain a j decree on the ground of desertion she was surprised when she learned that guggen heim was in Chicago and that it was in tended that be should compromise himself in order that a statutory charge could be made â€¢ following the granting of the decree the complainant returned to new york where she was led to believe that the defendant who is the youngest member of the well known guggenheim family consisting of seven sons of the late meyer guggenheim was the weakest and least important mem ber of the family accept 150,000 alimony she insisted on alimony of j5o,ouo but finally was induced to accept 1-0,000 from which ber solicitor's fees were de ducted then followed her marriage to wahl and when he obtained an annulment of their marriage she asserts she believed her self free again ik marry un consulting lier present attorney she was advised that the Chicago divorce was absolutely void ind that she still is the legal wife of the lefendant reference also is made to ihe pending new york suit instituted by thc complain in in 1!k)s in this she seeks an abso ute divorce naming as co-respondent aimee lillian steinberger bis present wife guggenheim's ex-wife in strike case says lawyers new york june b the lawyers for william guggenheim announced to-night that the suit brought by bis former wife grace in Chicago to-day was a plain strike case they declared that there was never a conspiracy on the part of the guggenheim family to inveigle the woman into getting an illegal divorce and they declared they would show that the verdict was entirely legal lawvcr eenis werner who is named in mrs guggenheim's complaint as ouc of the conspirators to the alleged fraudulent divorce declared that there was no taint of anv kind connected with that action she may want more of the guggen heim money he said but without knowing the fads of this case 1 should sa.v sbe won't get it ou any charges of fraud the divorce was perfectly legal and she obtained it of her own volition about the alimonv and its distribution i haven't a word to say gives 8 000,000 to woman in romance parisian merchant who dies unmarried remembers friend's devoted care makes other huge gifts eccentric will provides for a gay funeral for noted art connoisseur paris june .<";.â€” the crowning surprise of the eccentric will left by h a chan cbard owner of the l.nnvn store came out to lay it was earned thai the fa mous merchant who had never married who even nt death's decor ignored his own kin and whose one interest seemed lo be in gathering treasures of art had cher ished for years unknown tic the world a romantic friendship for a woman mine bousln an old and eicellent friend who for many years lias shown the testator the most de-voted care is to re ceive from m chauchard's estate the astonishing sum of 9.000.000 francs iss 000.000 possibly it is ihe greatest for tune ever left to a woman under such cir cumstances . mute bausin is tl residuary legatee it was she who announced to-day the gift of 200,000 to ihe poor of paris and 00,-00 to establish a pension fund for thc em ployes of m chauchard's store added lo the other prodigious bequests to friends io the nation and lo his own dead scil this uit'r to mme bonsia makes fhe will of the connoisseur-merchant the most interesting document of the kind ever drawn pari amazed at gifts paris bin already stood gralcfullj | n mazed al the present of aii m clmuclt jard's wonderful art treasures to the people besides a priceless collection of pictures ihis gift includes ,; goualin carpet for which he paid uoo,ooo nnd on which he al lowed iio nr to step except himself the entire collection is valued at 4,000.0w then to his friend george leygueÃŸ law yer nm author he bequeathed 13,000.000 francs i^l.tui.ikvii inston t'liimette pro prietor of figaro receives 400,000 his secretary's legacy is . st.i.ooo and even the servants of his mansion receive sums ranging frfon sv.i'kii to s 100,000 ivihaps most c.-r,.|,;(fie of all are thc arraii-oments made by the dying man for bis funeral to the minutest detail even to the shaving of the mourners beards he proclaimed his wishes for a most pompous cortege coaches will be gay after lying in state two days during which lite shop is to he closed the body will he duced in a magnificent car pre ceded hy 4.00(1 employes in habits of mourning and a guard of horsemen and borne to the madeleine the mourning coaches provided for those invited are thc gayest of all in the styles of louis quinie there will lie clean-shaven coachmen and footmen in gala costumes impressively trimmed in gold lace of specially lavish designs knee breeches wigs and cocked hats from ihe madeleine the cortjejr will pro ceed to perc i.achai.sc whose portals will be draped in black before ihe t.nnli dis tinguished orators will succeed one another in extolling the merits of the departed 11 chaurliard was a bachelor and lived in a princely resilience where he kept nnm'emue valuable paintings iil bias pub lished ihe text of an insurance policy held hy m chain-hard on his collection of ob jects of art and pictures one picture worth $ i 1 0,000 among the pictures are twenty-six meissoniera valued a 065300 the highest being tsu the value of which is placed at 1-9.0-0 eighteen tro.vens rained at 479,000 seven millets including the cele brated the angclus entered for slid 000 and the white shepherdess and flock valued al 50,000 twenty-jive cordis rated at 446.-08 eight daublgnys valued al 7,000 seventeen diasez valued at 119,800 one t.'ainsiiorough valued at 3,000 ar.d five isabe.vs valued at fsslsoo balloon up 481-2 hours i.nnt gn nnjs to i mill the indiana tome to kiirili iniuanapolis ind june b with the landing of the balloon indiana at iluskin tenn at t'.:â€žo last night though it was uot reported until to-day ail the balloons in the national championship race are down fiflher of the indiana claims a continuous flight of forty-eight and one half hours and declares he did not land when he took water on hoard sunday in tennessee latest returns to-day show the st louis came down at kelso tenn 7 p m sunday while the university city descended monday evening near lookout mountain this gives the latter 30-j mite beating the new york about ten miles held as a 40,000 thief c'hnrch worker aecused of xew bank embezzlement plan new haven conn june 8 an al leged new expert iu embezzlement has been locked up here he is frederick h brig ham head bookkeeper of the merchants national hank officers of the institution are certain . jo.ooo is missing and there are indications that the sum may reach 80,000 brigham is said to have issued checks to himself and they were pa i,i through the regular clearing house process to account for the deficits he is alleged to have made false entries the where abouts of the money is a mastery he was prominent iu religious work in the humphrey street congregational church bride-to-be sends backpresents philip t starck sails alone north side society girl who returns wedding gifts after event is in definitely postponed and her fiance who sails on ship which couple were to hare taken on their honeymoon trip '.__ north side society surprised when miss ruehl's wedding is indefinitely postponed i the hundreds of friends in Chicago of j miss mildred a uuehl the beautiful j daughter of 1 r and mrs l a ktiehl 1 107 sheridan road and rhilip t starck one of edgewater's most popular youug | bachelors son of i a starck and prurni ! nent in the business life of the city were i surprised a fen days ago to receive bocs ithe presents which had been sent miss iruehl and mr stank in anticipation of ; their marriage which had been set for j may 2b in st paul's german f.vangelical church these hundred of friends of the society girl and the voting bachelor had heard :: few days previous that tha wedding of i miss hr.ehl and mr starck bad been post j posed on account of the illness of the i bride-t o-be it had been generally sufi ; posed that the wedding would take place jas soon as miss ittiehl recovered her health ! but with the return of the wedding pres entg enine ihe announcement of the in | definite postponement of the wedding to-day on the i.usitania ln company with | one of his closest friends and the man i who was to have been one uf the ushers at his wedding rhilip t starck is sailing for europe ile is sailing ou the ship on i which he planned to take bis bride to europe for a houeymoon trip and on the date originally set for the sailing frank koehler son of t n koehler ls going to europe with young mr starck explanation is withheld just why the wedding of miss ruehl and mr starck has been indefinitely post poned is something that has not been ex plained miss uuehl apparently has re covered her health she will vouchsafe no explanation neither will the family of mr starck it was only last saturday said p a starck father of the young man and bead of tlie p a starck piano company that we sent out the announcements of the in definite postponement of the wedding i do uot know now whether or not they will ever be married the last thing that philip said to the on sunday before going to new york was father i cannot live without mudred i do not know that the engagement has been broken philip has told me nothing about it he is old enough to know what to do himself i shall be perfectly satis tied if he marries miss ruehl and i shall also be satisfied if he does not 1 believe mr starck is still in Chicago said miss uuehl yesterday and we ex pect to make an announcement very soon it is true that all of the presents have beeu returned the engagement is off in definitely Â¥â– miss uuehl did not explai^n the apparent contradictious in her statement in new york last night philip starck would not say that the engagement bet we e himself land miss ruehl had been broken the postponement of our marriage wai jriue entirely to miss bnehl's delicate j health " he said miss littciil < greatly twan stole from book says author english writer makes accusa tion and fails to see amer ican's latest joke new yokk june b mark twain went to the offices of his publishers harper & urns last spring and left manuscript ask ing that it be put into book form and puo lished right away * it's part of my autobiography ox plained the author but i thought i'd like to have ir put in covers and printed now the publishers hurried matters and it was not long_^iefore the manuscript as sumed ihe form of twain's latest book is shakespeare dead the book was put on the market in april the author admits he incorporated a larger pttr't of a chapter from a volume called the shakespeare problem re stated written by george g greenwood m i of london it takes up twenty-ttv^t of the 150 pages in murk twain's book the humorist mentioned mr greenwood's book ln his own work but neglected to mention greenwood's name bristling controversy results because of this oversight there has arisen a bristling little controversy mr green wood's publishers thc john lane company of london have sent word to harper & bros that they will not permit mark twain's book to be circulated in england until the plates are altered giving mr greenwood credit in his shakespeare book mark twain puts forth the argument that shnkespeare could not have written the plays ascribed to him because the author must have been a law yer he arrives at this conclusion because as he says of the peculiar freedom and exactness of legal phraseology that he finds occurs frequently in shakespeare s plays there is nothing he holds to show that shakespeare knew anything of law protested chapter aids theory mark twain reprints the chapter from mr greenwood's book fo bear out this theory and it ls this appropriation with out using mr greenwood's name that has caused the member of parliament through his publishers to protest in a letter to a new york paper mr lane says he is not a humorist and i fail to see the point of this mark twain's latest joke good taste sometimes limits the boundaries of humorous perception in this country city employes discharged two city employes were discharged yes j i terday after-eon by the civil service crra i mission on charges of neglect of duty ! preferred by their superiors they were : mlcha j white 2297 richmond street mason inspector and john hoiliu 630 jackson boulevard arc lamp trimmer school board kills 100,000 bond to aid book trust when action to forfeit guar antee to give city lowest prices is threatened se curity is lowered to 5,000 urion and sonsteby near blows cooley accused o concealing ginn & co dis crimination against Chicago demand ex-superintendent b forced to testify here schneider tries to pas â– resolution to stop probe as a climax tn a meeting which fair bristled with serious charges and counte charges concerning members of the boart of education the book trtist investijratin committee last evening disclosed the fa i that the board bad voluntarily relievet one nf the biggest companies under invest gation f a bond nf fioo.ooft instead of this big bond under which th company guaranteed tc give Chicago th lowest book prices tn be bad in the cou try the company was permitted to give boutf of but one-twentieth f that sum j s,(xxk this substitution became apparen when the trust investigators seriously co templated bringing action to compel tl offending publishers to forfeit the big bon right on the heels nf this disclosure came the charge made by chairman job j sonsteby that former superintenden of ihools 1 g cciciiey bad kuowu of th lower pr'ees offered elsewhere by ginn co the pnirlishers who were relieved the bond and bad not inf-ormed the boart nf kdueation of this fact until after th company had secured fat contracts wi the city then as the author of the presen trouble 1 demand that mr cooley be compelled to come back here and give u additional information on the matter exclaimed dr john guerln springing t his feet says cooley refused data mr cooley even refused to give 18 th names of a committee f two which h sent down to indiana tn get the fact about the operations of ginn & c0 re plied chairman sonsteby i don't se how we could compel mr cooley to re turn mr cooley now is head of d c heath & co one of the publishing houses tha admitted overcharging Chicago childre for books and offering to meet the lowe prices discovered by the investigating com m it tee trustee sonsteby tlsen explained that-th ginn bonds had been lowered during t_w period that the dunne trustees were no members of the board of education ta ing this as a direct slap at him as on of the members who took part ln the low ering of the bonds trustee alfred r irion immediately denied that the bon had covered the matter of prices i want to show that i have had n part in favoring the school book trust exclaimed urion i think that that bon will show that it was given solely to 1 sure immediate delivery of the company books -. moreover he added looking directly a chairman sonsteby i do not want yon t give out that the board of which i was member was responsible for any suchi acts i never have made such a statement hotly retorted sonsteby trustees near to blows you have given out such interviews that isn't true and i defy you to pro duce them or show that i made such statement as chairman sonsteby made this repl he half raised in his chair and both of th trustees assumed attitudes that gave prom ise of a physical encounter then ther was a pause of a moment and both re sumed their seats again i'll ask that that bond be brought in here to prove my statement finally said l'rion all right we'll go and get it answered chairman sonsteby xo let us finish our present business first said urion it is finished we will get the bond said sonsteby then i'll withdraw my motion said trustee urion to the surprise of everybody present well as nobody is resting under charges but those who made the motion they may continue to rest under them if they de sire to do so replied sonsteby i am under no charges that i am not content to rest under was the reply during these plain statements other members of the committee appareutly feariug a more serious encounter fidgeted ln their seats and endeavored to stop the flow of words of the two men hardly had this byplay ended than president otto c schneider offered r resolution in whlch r.e endeavored to get into i lie records that i there was no evidence \" support t charges against ginn & co the trordlng of the rus part 0 f the resolution read ns foi i jiercas there s no ndence of any i sori^^^ubstantiate the charges that gisn continued on 2d page 2d i(jljmn jp j settled wednesday and thursday 1 s Â£ with showers not much change in x_i \\ temperature moderate east to j&ji tlvj northeast winds liw g*o matter what your wants mav he the l mm classified ads on pages 13 14 and irsi 1d vvill ' si>lvc - our p r Â° diem - a&32r do these few classifications suggest any immediate need ? agents wanted rooms to rent building material flats to rent billiard and pool tables business chances typewriters situations wanted machinery | animals and birds etc it will pay you to read the classified ads every dav v v

Chicago examiner vol vii no 146 a m wednesday june 9 1909 16 pages price one cent euver.rt y caialcw 30 cents per month Taft to insist on inheritance tax if made tariff arbitrator aldrich and president hold long conference on plans to pass bill fight on wool schedule dolliver in fiery speech charges plot between the woolen manufacturers washington june b president Taft and senator aldrich were in conference an hour and a half at the executive of fices this afternoon the tariff is supposed to have been the topic under discussion no statement was given out with regard to the conference specifically it was bald at the wbjte house that there was nothing to be said about the announce ment that the president was called upon to act as arbitrator between the senate and house conferees on the tariff bill this announcement has greatly simpli fied the situation it is generally sup posed that senator aldrich has put the president in a position largely to get out of the conference the kind of a bill he be lieves will meet the platform pledges of his party if it be pointed out that under this plan the party leaders are thrusting upon the president responsibility for their work the answer is that he must accept responsibility anyhow for the bill to which he appends his signature any pos sibility of a veto would also be obviated by the consent of the president thus to act as referee an important feature of the latest de velopments in the situation is that the in heritance tax provision will not down and if the president engages ln the role of arbitrator that tax or the tax on cor poration dividends which is next on the president's list of special revenue pro ducers will go into the tariff bill aldrich favorable to plan from an authoritative source it is learned that senator aldrich is not indisposed to the plan for the president to act as arbi trator there was no session of the senate to night the entire day was spent iu con sideration of the woolen schedule without any vote being taken and it ls likely that the debate will continue for several day more before a vote is had at the close of to-day's session senator clay of georgia got the floor too late to begin a speech but ln a heated altercation with kean of new jersey who was in the chair he served notice that he would pay his compliments to the republicans of the senate to-mor row ever since the administration of andrew johnson wool has been one of the products of the american farmer that has been pro tected by a tariff duty in the aldrich bill wool schedule which came up for con sideration to-day the rates in some in stances exceed the tax fixed by the dingley bill senator dolliver attacked the sched ule in a fiery speech charging that a com bination existed between the worsted manu facturers and those who weave the finer woolens it was a day of talk nearly every sen ator had something to say senators war ren and dolliver afforded real amusement dolliver took exception to the finance com mittee's amendment raising the duty on various kinds of woolen wastes from 20 and 25 cents to so cents per pound he declared that this would work a hardship on the carded woolen manufacturers grosvenor in a 10 suit mr warren protested that in objecting to the rates proposed mr dolliver was abandoning the doctrine of protection dolliver defended his republicanism senator carter called attention to the small percentage of carded wool now being manufactured he said not a carded wool en suit was to be found in the senate chamber and when the carded woolen rep resentatives came before the wavs and means committee it was noticed thev all wore worsteds general grosvenor bad on a suit of carded woolen a suit-that cost 10 said mr dolliver but he is a statesman out of a job " said carter he represents the wool growers of the lulled states returned the lowan mr dolliver succeeded in getting mr carter to admit that his proposition to amend the aldrich woolen schedule and base the rates on shrinkage would be an improvement over the present law mr smoot said that mr dolliver's su gestlon would te all right except that it would be impossible to administer it mr warren said it would require a read justment of the entire wool schedule rich man's wipe who declares divorce void dixey is married again marie nordstrom bride actor secretly weds the leading lady of mary jane's pa com pany new york june b henry e dixey famous as the stage hero of adonis the man on the box and mary jane's pa let it be known to-day that he has married again and has been married for three weeks past at least his bride is miss marie nordstrom leading lady of the mary jane's pa company and mr dixey brought her back to new york with htm from the west to-night just where the marriage occurred is not divulged he confessed that miss nord strom had been mrs dixey for some days before the company closed out mary jane's pa at milwaukee last saturday dight it was a secret marriage and we've come back to spend the first part of onr honeymoon that's all i care to say about it mr dixey said Taft gives girl watch president presents memento of trip to miss mabel boardman washington june 8.-m!ss mabel boardman was presented to-night by pres ident Taft with a handsome diamond stud ded watch it was a token of esteem from the celebrated philippine party which the president then secretary of war took with him iu 1905 to the philippines and the orient miss boardman did much to make this party a pleasant one and in no small meas ure made three couples happy the long worths representative and mrs swager sherley and former representative iÂ»,l j mrs w bourke cockran the presenta tion took place at th boardman home it was unexpected by miss boardman who greeted the visitors in shirtwaist and street skirt tip not for landlord wall street broker finds property owner behind l.nnch counter xew york june b two avall street men were wining at the north lunch count er in the astor house rotunda recently at the conclusion of the meal one laid a quarter down at us plate for the waiter the other pocketed all of his change don't you ever tip the waiter quired the first broker tip the waiter exclaimed the second not much that's my landlord the waiter-landlord was charl-s miller who has collected tips at the astor house lunch counter for thirty-three years dur ing that lime he has amassed the tidv snm of t)0.000 most of his fortune is invested in brooklyn real estate chicagoan hurt in paris taxicab collides with cor wounds attorney manrlce heekels paris jnne b maurice heckels a chi cago lawyer was seriously wounded iu the bead and face to-day by broken glass lie was riding in it taxicab which came in collision with a tramcar at the corner of kite rivoli and line itoulc kill wild steer in mad chase a policeman a wild steer a patrol wa gon a crowd of men women and children and tt revolver played parts in an excit ing chase culminating in the death of the animal iu the stock s'ards district yester day the steer escaped from the morris & co pens and threatened to injure pedes trians guggenheim decree is declared fraud tx-mayor dunne who grant id decree now wants his decision reviewed wo han secured 150,000 wife r alleges her husband left ko r at the behest of family charges that , , Â„ , .... - a decree of divorce oa tÂ«"""l.hy jrac b (; â€ž-,.,â€ž ll ,. ll â€ž ,â€ž p from wllÃŸam -,â€žâ€ž,,â€ž,â€ž.;â€ž,. bead â€ž r , llp smeiret trust wl _ ,â€ž,,,:,â€žâ€ž. â€ž ;, f , 1;:i , were made before Â„..,,.,. â€žâ€ž.,â€ž,._ vl , st . n , lv and followed by â– ,â€ž,;.,â€ž ( â€ž sh(l(v _.__ why the decree sk mi , ,â€žâ€ž Â„â€ž s â€ž t aside . former mayor l-ldw k dullb / a ppe_red m court with five :>?;,,,â€ž-,;â€ž ,â€ž _.â€ž,*,, t â€ž h alleged fraud is deta ti . ( â€ž-__ w . ls obtained before j i, , vl . ile wwle _d it was suggested that our difficulties be placed in the hands of our respective at torneys to arrange matters to my satis faction and for my proper protection she then declares it was suggested thai she go lo south dakota and remain there for six months in order to obtain a legal i domicile she flatly refused to go and soon afterward was td'.d that it would bej necessary for her to go to Chicago where a valid decree of divorce cotrtd he se 1 cured believing site was to obtain a j decree on the ground of desertion she was surprised when she learned that guggen heim was in Chicago and that it was in tended that be should compromise himself in order that a statutory charge could be made â€¢ following the granting of the decree the complainant returned to new york where she was led to believe that the defendant who is the youngest member of the well known guggenheim family consisting of seven sons of the late meyer guggenheim was the weakest and least important mem ber of the family accept 150,000 alimony she insisted on alimony of j5o,ouo but finally was induced to accept 1-0,000 from which ber solicitor's fees were de ducted then followed her marriage to wahl and when he obtained an annulment of their marriage she asserts she believed her self free again ik marry un consulting lier present attorney she was advised that the Chicago divorce was absolutely void ind that she still is the legal wife of the lefendant reference also is made to ihe pending new york suit instituted by thc complain in in 1!k)s in this she seeks an abso ute divorce naming as co-respondent aimee lillian steinberger bis present wife guggenheim's ex-wife in strike case says lawyers new york june b the lawyers for william guggenheim announced to-night that the suit brought by bis former wife grace in Chicago to-day was a plain strike case they declared that there was never a conspiracy on the part of the guggenheim family to inveigle the woman into getting an illegal divorce and they declared they would show that the verdict was entirely legal lawvcr eenis werner who is named in mrs guggenheim's complaint as ouc of the conspirators to the alleged fraudulent divorce declared that there was no taint of anv kind connected with that action she may want more of the guggen heim money he said but without knowing the fads of this case 1 should sa.v sbe won't get it ou any charges of fraud the divorce was perfectly legal and she obtained it of her own volition about the alimonv and its distribution i haven't a word to say gives 8 000,000 to woman in romance parisian merchant who dies unmarried remembers friend's devoted care makes other huge gifts eccentric will provides for a gay funeral for noted art connoisseur paris june .lvc - our p r Â° diem - a&32r do these few classifications suggest any immediate need ? agents wanted rooms to rent building material flats to rent billiard and pool tables business chances typewriters situations wanted machinery | animals and birds etc it will pay you to read the classified ads every dav v v